Depending on their situation and status, they could be either farm hands, serfs, tenants, sharecroppers or lessees.
Sharecroppers were forced to buy tools and seed from their landowners for exorbitant prices. When the harvest came in, the crops were sold for barely enough to pay off the loans the sharecroppers took out to eat and survive. This left little to pay off the debt that they owed.
The term for farmers who did not pay rent but worked the land they lived on is "sharecroppers." Sharecroppers typically paid a portion of their crops or profits to the landowner as rent. This system was prevalent in the Southern United States after the Civil War and often resulted in cycles of debt and poverty for the sharecroppers.
They fished, farmed and irrigated their land.
Sharecroppers were charged high interest rates and had to give a portion of their crops to the landowners. This meant that most sharecroppers lived in poverty with little chance to own land or homes of their own.
Farmers owned the land they farmed, and could keep what they earned. Sharecroppers farmed land owned by someone else, and kept part of the profits from the crop.
They would be sharecroppers.
Sharecroppers are tenants who work on land owned by someone else and pay a portion of their crops as rent. Landowners, on the other hand, own the land and may lease or rent it out to sharecroppers or other tenants. Landowners have legal ownership and control over the land, while sharecroppers work the land in exchange for a share of the crops they produce.
Depending on their situation and status, they could be either farm hands, serfs, tenants, sharecroppers or lessees.
They had to stay on the land until they could pay
They had to stay on the land until they could pay
Sharecroppers typically did not own the land they farmed. Instead, they would work on a landowner's property in exchange for a portion of the crops they produced. Sharecropping was a way for people, often former slaves or poor farmers, to gain access to land and earn a living, but the system often left them in a cycle of debt and poverty.
they had to stay on the land until they could pay
they had to stay on the land until they could pay
they had to stay on the land until they could pay
they had to stay on the land until they could pay
They had to stay on the land until they could pay